Neste Renewable Diesel Handbook

A summary of the Neste renewable diesel handbook as guide for shipowners

Neste Corporation calls its own HVO product “Neste Renewable Diesel” or “Neste MY Renewable Diesel™”. The common acronym “HVO” comes from the terms “Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil”. It meets the requirements of EN 15940 for paraffinic diesel fuels and is allowed as a blending component in EN 590 B7 diesel fuel without any fixed maximum percentage. In practice, the maximum amount of Neste Renewable Diesel to be blended is limited by the lower density limit in EN 590, which often limits the blending to ~30-50% of Neste Renewable Diesel. It is a high quality fuel that can be used to enhance the properties of the final diesel blend. No modifications to vehicles required and it has the same torque and maximum power as with fossil diesel fuel in modern engines. Furthermore, properties of HVO include:

  • No cold operability issues with severe winter grades.

  • Low tendency to form deposits in fuel injection system and fuel injectors.

  • No engine oil dilution issues or chemical incompatibilities with engine oil.

  • Possibility to design more fuel-efficient low-emission diesel engines (“diesel-FFV-vehicles”).

  • Reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 50−90%, pending on the stock and blend.

It should be noted that Sustainable Ships does not receive any revenue for promoting Neste - we simply believe it is one of the best biofuels available


General

The common acronym “HVO” comes from the terms “Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil” or “Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil”. They originate from the time before 2010 when only vegetable oils were used as feedstocks. Today HVO is increasingly produced from waste and residue fat fractions coming from the food industry, as well as from non-food grade vegetable oil fractions. Thus “HVO” and “Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil” are no longer accurate terms describing the origin of the fuel. However, those terms cannot be changed easily since they are common in the European regulation, fuel standards, and biofuel quality recommendations set by automotive companies. According to several chemistry experts, “Hydrotreated” referring to fuel processing is preferable over “Hydrogenated”, as the latter is commonly linked to the manufacturing of margarine. Neste Corporation calls its own HVO product “Neste Renewable Diesel” or “Neste MY Renewable Diesel™”.

“Renewable Paraffinic Diesel” has also been commonly used, as it is chemically a proper definition for product quality. However, this term also covers Biomass-to-Liquid (BTL) fuels made by Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and, therefore, does not define the feedstock and process used to produce “HVO”. Also the terms “HDRD”, i.e. “Hydrogenation Derived Renewable Diesel”, “Non Ester Renewable Diesel”, “Renewable Hydrocarbon Diesel”, and “HBD”, i.e. “Hydro-generated Biodiesel”, have been used especially in North America and the Far East. The European EN 15940 standard uses the term “Paraffinic Diesel Fuel from Hydrotreatment”. This handbook refers to isomerized, good cold operability and high cetane number (above 70) products meeting EN 15940 Class A requirements. In this document, “HVO”, “Neste Renewable Diesel”, “NRD” and “renewable diesel” are used to refer to such products.

The hydrotreatment of vegetable oils as well as suitable waste and residue fat fractions through patented the NEXBTL™ process to produce HVO is an already mature commercial scale manufacturing process. It is based on oil refining know-how and is used for the production of biofuels for diesel engines. In the process, hydrogen is used to remove oxygen from, for example, triglyceride vegetable oil molecules and to split the triglyceride into three separate chains, thus creating hydrocarbons that are similar to existing diesel fuel components. This allows blending in any desired ratio without any concerns regarding fuel quality.

HVO is a mixture of straight chain and branched paraffins – the simplest type of hydrocarbon molecules from the clean and complete combustion point of view. Typical carbon numbers are C15...C18. Paraffins exist also in fossil diesel fuels, which additionally contain significant amounts of aromatics and naphthenes. Aromatics are not favourable for clean combustion. HVO is practically free of aromatics and its properties are quite similar to Gas-to-Liquid (GTL) and BTL diesel fuels made by Fischer Tropsch synthesis from natural gas and gasified biomass. At least the companies presented in Table 1 have developed stand-alone HVO production processes and products.

In many cases, the abbriation “XTL/HVO” is used for paraffinic fuels. XTL is a term used to describe synthetic GTL, CTL and BTL Fischer-Tropsch production paths. Since there are no practical methods for measuring paraffinic content, the paraffinic nature is proven by limiting aromatic content to practically zero. Nominally, fuel’s paraffinic purity is min. 98.5 wt-% “without any intentional adding of non-paraffinic material other than additives or markers” since 100.0% purity cannot be verified from a fuel sample because of inaccuracy of analytical methods.


Fuel Specifications

  • Meets the requirements of EN 15940 for paraffinic diesel fuels.

  • Allowed as a blending component in EN 590 B7 diesel fuel without any fixed maximum percentage.

  • Fulfils ASTM D975 requirements.

  • Ester type biodiesel (FAME) standard EN 14214 is not valid for Neste Renewable Diesel.

  • Energy content is defined in directive RED II 2018/2001/EU Annex II.


Properties

  • One of the highest heating values among current biofuels.

  • Severe winter and arctic grades available, thanks to the isomerization process.

  • Usable either as 100% HVO fuel or as a “drop in” blending component within diesel fuel.

  • High quality component that can be used to enhance the properties of the final diesel blend.

  • Lower density (780 kg/m3) compared to common European diesel fuels (800...845 kg/m3 ).

  • Higher energy content compared to FAME, both in MJ/kg and MJ/l.

  • Stability is good and comparable to fossil diesel.

  • Does not have similar storage stability challenges as FAME, and therefore NRD does not require a “best before” date.

  • Due to the low water dissolving property, the risk of microbial growth is similar to fossil diesel and no additional precautions are needed.

  • Requires a lubricity additive in the same way as sulphur free diesel fuels and GTL. Generally, similar types of lubricity additives can be used in fossil diesel fuel and Neste Renewable Diesel.


Performance

  • No modifications to vehicles required.

  • Same torque and maximum power as with fossil diesel fuel in modern engines.

  • No cold operability issues with severe winter grades.

  • Low tendency to form deposits in fuel injection system and fuel injectors.

  • No engine oil dilution issues or chemical incompatibilities with engine oil.

  • Possibility to design more fuel-efficient low-emission diesel engines (“diesel-FFV-vehicles”).

  • Supported in Worldwide Fuel Charter published by automotive and engine manufacturers.


Blending

  • Allowed as a blending component in EN 590 B7 diesel fuel without any fixed maximum percentage. In practice, the maximum amount of Neste Renewable Diesel to be blended is limited by the lower density limit in EN 590, which often limits the blending to ~30-50% of Neste Renewable Diesel.

  • Preserves and even improves the properties of the final diesel fuel blend. Benefits depend on the blending ratio.

  • Minimum density specified in EN 590 limits the maximum amount of NRD that can be blended in the final fuel.

  • Can be blended in all ratios with ASTM D975 fuel, due to the absence of density limitations.

  • Some attention needed if FAME and renewable diesel are blended, especially regarding the precipitation of FAME originated impurities.

  • Blends well with GTL fuels.


Production

  • Neste Renewable Diesel is produced through the hydrotreatment route, a complex industrial process that needs high pressure and temperature.

  • Distillation range is within a similar range typical of European summer grade diesel fuel.

  • Lower final boiling point compared to FAME.


Sustainability Criteria & Emissions

  • EU Renewable Energy Directive II - Gives default GHG values for some of the biofuel pathways to help fuel producers calculate the GHG emissions of the entire life cycle of fuel. Obligates Member States to have a minimum of 14% of the energy consumed in road and rail transport originated from renewable sources by 2030. Individual Member States may have even more challenging requirements.

  • The sulphur content is < 1 mg/kg, but, due to possible contaminants within normal diesel logistics, the specification is set to ≤ 5.0 mg/kg.

  • Can be used in blends to reduce the sulphur content of the final diesel fuel.

  • The ash content is < 0.001% and thus does not cause excess burden for modern exhaust aftertreatment systems.

  • Reduces engine out NOx , particulate (also nanosize), CO, HC, PAH, aldehyde and mutagenic emissions.

  • Reduces cold start smoke and emissions in winter conditions.

  • Effects seen already at 10...30% blending ratios.

  • Ash-free combustion offers a long lifetime for particulate filters.


References

Neste - Renewable Diesel Handbook 2020

Neste - Renewable Diesel Handbook 2016


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